But How Am I Doing Compared to Other Companies?Insights from the KISSmetrics customer base
Cindy AlvarezWeb 2.0 Expo • March 29th, 2011
I don’t know if this is good.
Numbers are like the latest diet craze
“All Company X had to do was _____ and they
were profitable!”
“All you have to do is hit this number...”
Not everyone gets the same results from12,000 calories per day
Observations from 300+ web businesses
Data from October 2009 - February 2011
Benchmark data from February 2011
Social/community sites • Content businesses • Consumer services • SaaS / Subscription • E-commerce • Daily Deal •Apps / Games • Professional blogs
About the KISSmetrics data
A/B tests are like baseball• ...your batting percentage won’t ever approach 100%
• Over half of KISSmetrics customers have A/B test reports
Landing pages • # of steps in signup • Upgrade CTAs •Billing upfront vs. later • Design
General observations
Multiple signup sources• Many customers have multiple signup flows (not just for
testing)
• “Traditional” homepage signup vs. mobile signup
• Facebook Connect / Twitter
• Google App Marketplace / 3rd-party partner
General observations
You will lose people when you introduce friction• One conversion % never tells the whole story
• Does it make sense to put the friction before or after signup?
• Target market and purpose matter
General observations
Indirect Monetization
Daily Deal
E-commerceSaaS /
Subscription
By business model
Indirect Monetization
Customer does not pay
Site types:Content and review sitesGames and community sites
What are they measuring: Signup
Homepage > Facebook Connect > Signed Up
Homepage > Viewed Signup > Submitted Signup Form
Social Share Landing Page > Social Connect > Signed Up
What are they measuring: Sharing
Signup > Shared / Liked / Commented
Signup > Started Configuration > Completed Configuration
Signup > Contributed Content
Conversion = homepage -> signed up
9.6%
lowest 2.1% - highest 34.5%
median signup conversion
average signup conversion 13.2%
Indirect Monetization (21 sites, full month of Feb 2011)
Results may not be typical*
• Self-selected audiences (professional, niche sites) have higher conversion rates
• Aspirational services (finance, health) have higher conversion rates but lower retention rates
• Where you put signup and how many steps are involved affects conversions
Questions you should ask: authentication
• Am I losing customers before or after Facebook Connect?
• Does offering multiple sign-in options help or hurt conversion rate?
• Does asking for additional information post-Facebook Connect hurt conversion rates significantly?
Daily Deal
Customer “pays” with their email address; might pay later for a deal
Site types:Limited-time deal
What are they measuring: Subscriptions
Homepage > Entered Email Address
Individual Deal Page > Entered Email Address
Social Share Landing Page > Social Connect
What are they measuring: Deals Bought
Email > Purchased Deal
Homepage > Purchased Deal
Individual Deal Page (via social) > Purchased Deal
Conversion = homepage > subscribed to list
7.6% lowest 3.3% - highest 17.3%
median subscription conversion
Daily Deal (12 sites, full month of Feb 2011)
Conversion = viewed deal > deal bought
17.6%
lowest 5.3% - highest 40.5%
median purchase conversion
average purchase conversion 18.4%
Daily Deal (12 sites, full month of Feb 2011)
Results may not be typical*
• Self-selected audiences (professional, niche sites) have higher conversion rates
• A single “killer deal” can skew an entire month of data
• Sites covering fewer metro areas have much lower conversion rates due to customer inability to follow through
Questions you should ask: order of events
• Is purchase completion rate affected by whether customers come in via homepage or individual deal page?
• Does showing previous deals increase subscription rate?
• Can we increase email subscriptions by putting company focus (i.e. niche) first vs. leading with the big deal?
• Does “Groupon clone” UX help or hurt conversions?
E-Commerce
Customer pays, highly variable intent
Site types:Electronic and tangible goods
What are they measuring: Findability
Homepage > Browsed > Viewed Single Product
Homepage > Searched > Viewed Single Product
Viewed Single Product > Viewed Recommended Product
What are they measuring: Purchasing
Viewed Single Product > Added to Cart > Purchased
Viewed Single Product > Added to Cart > Created Account > Purchased
Conversion = purchase completed
5.9%
lowest 0.2% - highest 32.1%
median purchase conversion
average purchase conversion 9.3%
E-commerce (23 sites, full month of Feb 2011)
Results may not be typical*
• Don’t even try to compare general consumer commodity, professional, and niche sites. Just don’t.
• Sites who use PayPal or another off-site merchant solution have lower purchase completion rates
• Purchase price and purchase frequency have a huge impact on completion rates
Questions you should ask: findability
• Are customers who browse able to proceed and view an individual product?
• Are customers who search able to proceed and view an individual product?
• Are “browsers” or “searchers” more likely to complete purchase?
• Are customers who enter the site directly on an individual product page more likely to complete a purchase?
Questions you should ask: checkout steps
• How does requiring customers to create an account affect purchase completion?
• Does offering multiple payment methods help or hurt purchase completion?
• If account creation is moved to post-checkout, will customers complete that (now optional) step?
• Are customers who drop out of the checkout process returning to other pages on your site?
SaaS / Subscription
Customer may or may not payUsually enters under a free plan or limited free trialBilling information may be required upfront or later
Site types:Consumer servicesSmall business services
What are they measuring: Signup
Homepage > Signed Up for Free
Homepage > Started Free Trial
Homepage > Viewed Pricing > Signed Up
What are they measuring: Upgrade
Signed In > Upgraded
Viewed Upgrade Prompt > Upgraded
Signed In > Viewed Pricing > Upgraded
Clicked Email Link > Upgraded
Conversion = homepage -> signed up
2.3%
lowest 0.2% - highest 14.5%
median signup conversion
average signup conversion 3.3%
SaaS (37 sites, full month of Feb 2011)
Conversion = upgraded
2.3% lowest 0.3% - highest 8.9%
median subscription conversion
SaaS (37 sites, full month of Feb 2011)
Results may not be typical*
• B2C services have a higher signup rate than B2B services
• B2B services have a higher upgrade rate than B2C services
• Aspirational services (finance, health) have higher signup conversion rates
• No significant difference in signup rate between sites with or without a product tour
Questions you should ask: free-ness
• How does ‘sign up for free’, ‘free trial’, or ‘buy now - free for first X days’ affect initial conversion? Eventual upgrade?
• Will changing the length of my free trial increase upgrades?
• How does requiring billing information at signup affect initial conversion?
• How does showing multiple plans (vs. only showing ‘free’ initially) affect initial conversion? Upgrade rate?
Questions you should ask: signup source
• How do signups via a third-party partner differ from signups via your homepage?
• Does initial signup via a mobile device affect activation?
• Does initial signup via Facebook affect activation?
• Do customers acquired via a deal or coupon behave differently in terms of usage or upgrade rate?
Questions you should ask: onboarding
• Do customers who viewed a product tour complete initial onboarding/configuration more quickly?
• How many new customers complete the minimal required onboarding within a week?
• Does including a tour alongside the signup button affect initial signup? Eventual upgrade?
• How quickly are customers able to use the core features of your product?
Huge dropoffs during Facebook Connect process
More likely to buy a deal
than sign up
Can’t compare niche vs.
commodity
Least variable signup
conversion %